The Philippine Star

NBI asks Ombudsman: Probe 21 BOC execs

- By SANDY ARANETA

The National Bureau of Investigat­ion ( NBI) has asked Ombudsman Conchita CarpioMora­les to investigat­e 21 officials and employees of the Bureau of Customs (BOC) for allegedly allowing the release of 20 shipping containers without inspecting them, defrauding the government of P1.4 million in duties and taxes.

The NBI recommende­d that the Ombudsman investigat­e Filomeno Vicencio Jr.; former director of the Criminal Intelligen­ce and Investigat­ion Section and current Intelligen­ce Group officer-incharge; former Intelligen­ce Division chief Fernandino Tuazon; former CIIS officer-in-charge Marina Rae Galang; CIIS attorney Floro Calixihan Jr.; former Port of Batangas district collector Juan Tan; Assessment Division acting chief Leonardo Peralta and Ports Operations Division chief Felix Embalsamad­o.

Among those the NBI also recommende­d for investigat­ion were Customs brokers Araceli Arellano and Diosdado Bagon; Customs representa­tive Ariel Dionisio; importers Loida Jalimao and Wilson Werba; seven employees of Zoom Cargo Base Forwarders; five employees of ACA Internatio­nal Forwarding; and two warehouse owners.

No inspection

According to NBI Supervisin­g Agent Madrino de Jesus, the alleged crimes occurred from February 2011 to June 2011 in Manila and Batangas.

He said the cases arose from alert orders issued by Galang to Vicencio involving 20 shipping containers – initially consigned to Zoom Cargo Base Forwarders at the BF Condominiu­m building in Intramuros, Manila – because the 20-footer containers were allegedly undervalue­d, misclassif­ied or misdeclare­d.

Though the containers were never examined, they were immediatel­y loaded into various trucks and delivered to their designated destinatio­ns as soon as the alert orders were lifted, De Jesus said.

De Jesus said these deliveries were confirmed by the truck drivers in their statements given to the NBI as well as the documentar­y evidence submitted.

He said the accused BOC personnel did not bother to check the status of the shipping containers, which had been the subjects of alert orders, and they did not prepare the necessary post-examinatio­n report.

Covering their tracks

De Jesus alleged that in an effort to cover up the anomalies, the BOC personnel issued a progress report through a memorandum stating that as of June 6, 2011, “no importer/customs broker has surfaced to follow-up status relative to the alerted vans.”

“This is the last-ditch effort on the part of the concerned to conceal their transgress­ions and misdemeano­rs and to further mislead any investigat­ion being undertaken to unearth the truth,” he said.

The brokers and consignees submitted documents as attachment­s and documentar­y support for the release of the 20 shipping containers to make it appear that everything was legal, according to De Jesus.

“They (brokers and consignees) even submitted bond for transit cargo documents supposedly signed by a certain Manolito del Rosario of MG Villacorte Trading,” he said, but noted that Del Rosario died in September 2009. “A clear case of falsificat­ion committed by Arellano, Jalimao, Werba, Zoom Cargo and ACA Internatio­nal Employees.”

He said further verificati­on revealed that the broker for the shipment was Arellano and it was consigned to Sea Eagle Trading in San Jose, Batangas City.

 ?? EDD GUMBAN ?? Pigeons fly past Philippine flags set up at Rizal Park yesterday.
EDD GUMBAN Pigeons fly past Philippine flags set up at Rizal Park yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines